- Shane (film) - Wikipedia
Shane, a laconic but skilled gunfighter with a mysterious past, [5] rides into an isolated valley in the sparsely settled Wyoming Territory in 1889 A drifter, he is hired as a farmhand by hardscrabble rancher Joe Starrett, who is homesteading with his wife, Marian, and their young son, Joey
- Shane (1953) - IMDb
Shane: Directed by George Stevens With Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin, Brandon De Wilde An ex-gunfighter defends homesteaders in 1889 Wyoming
- Shane (1953) - Full cast crew - IMDb
Shane (1953) - Cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more
- Shane movie review film summary (1953) | Roger Ebert
Yes, on the surface, Shane is the gunfighter who wants to leave his past behind him, who yearns for the sort of domesticity he finds on Joe Starrett’s place in the Grand Tetons
- Shane 1953 (Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Jack Palance) - Archive. org
Shane rides into a conflict between cattleman Ryker and a bunch of settlers, like Joe Starrett and his family, whose land Ryker wants When Shane beats up Ryker's man Chris, Ryker tries to buy him
- Shane (novel) - Wikipedia
Shane – the protagonist, a mysterious gunslinger who enters into the life of Joe Starrett and his family and carves a place for himself in their hearts Although he tries to leave his gunslinging past behind, refusing even to carry a gun, he decides to fight Fletcher in order to save Starrett's farm
- Shane | Western, Classic, Iconic | Britannica
Shane, American western film, released in 1953, that is a classic of the genre, noted for exploiting the elegiac myths of the Old West via a unique juxtaposition of gritty realism and painstakingly composed visual symmetry
- Shane | Rotten Tomatoes
When the silent killer of the Maltese Falcon gets killed himself by hired gun Palance, Shane, a rough sleeping drifter, takes the law into his own hands, and then moves on
|